November 15, 2016

Werner Herzog Fans the Flames with Into the Inferno

      Written by Megan Scanlon   Whether you’ve seen every Werner Herzog film or have just opened the door to the Werner Herzog portal, there was nothing to be lost in translation when DOC NYC Director of Programming Basil Tsiokos introduced Into the Inferno. “It’s by Werner Herzog so you have a sense […]

November 15, 2016

Ken Dewey: Father of the Flash Mob

  Written by Kate Hoos   Ken Dewey may not be a name you are familiar with, but as Ken Dewey: This Is A Test reveals, his presence was felt all over the creative world and still reverberates today. The film made its world premiere at DOC NYC this Saturday and traces the life and […]

November 15, 2016

Exploring Family Dynamics by Looking Back and Moving Forward

  Written by Whitney Marin   “The narrative simply wasn’t ‘okay you’re gay, that means you have to leave your family’ or your family is unaccepting. There are these other models that were in existence,” says director, Thomas Allen Harris. “So for me that was really really important to create this film to talk about […]

November 14, 2016

Hope, Determination, and The Courage to be ‘Unbound’

  Written by Rebecca DeRosa   Athletes are no strangers to hard work and adversity—they endure long hours of training, grueling workouts and injuries, leaving little time for a social life. But few athletes have the added hardship of facing death threats from the Taliban. Girl Unbound: The War To Be Her premiered at DOC […]

November 14, 2016

Food Evolution Tackles The Great GMO Debate

  Written by Rebecca DeRosa   What is in the food we eat and how do we know if it is safe? With globalization and advances in technology, that is increasingly harder to answer. Many people believe that genetically modified food (GMOs) can cause a host of diseases and disorders such as alzheimer’s, autism, and […]

November 14, 2016

James Baldwin’s America

  Written by Whitney Marin   James Baldwin is a great American author that has touched the lives of many men and women across the world, having written a number of novels, essays, poems and plays that have penetrated the American consciousness and memorialized what it means to be black in America. For filmmaker Raoul […]

November 14, 2016

Fierce and Fashionable: Rose Hartman’s Photographic Legacy

  Written by Krystal Grow   She wasn’t a paparazzi, she wasn’t a fashion photographer, she wasn’t a journalist, she was a combination of all three. Tough enough to elbow her way through crowded clubs, clever enough to get into the most exclusive events, and savvy enough to know who was worth photographing once she […]

November 14, 2016

Off the Rails Poses Question of Obsession and Accountability

  Written by Kate Hoos   Off The Rails, the first film by director Adam Irving, made its NYC debut this Saturday at DOC NYC. It is a look into the life of the notorious “train in the neck” Darius McCollum, a New York City man who has a lengthy rap sheet of offenses stemming […]

November 14, 2016

Dr. Sarno’s Unconventional Diagnosis

  Written by Whitney Marin   Dr. John Sarno had been a practicing physician for over 50 years. He worked as a professor and attending physician at New York University’s Howard A. Rusk Institute of Rehabilitation Medicine until 2012 when he retired. At a point in his career, Dr. Sarno realized that the way he […]

November 13, 2016

Life Lessons On and Off the Court

  Written by Megan Scanlon   In a world of “what’s next” the DOC NYC experience connects filmmakers and audiences, tethering them to a specific moment in time, a shared experience and marker in life that affirms presence, that makes it enough to say, “I was there.” The world premiere of Mr. Chibbs was one […]